The only case where this question is rhetorical is when you do not really use Python enough to require deciding which management tool to use. Which tells me everything I need to know about you.
Yes you are right. I do not want to care about which management tool to use. Programming is a difficult to discipline as it is, the tools should make it easier, not more complicated. Some people might do programming purely as an exercise of self-fulfilment and they don't mind. For me it's a tool, a means to achieve some ends. If you think the python landscape and tools are in an optimal state, more power to you. Meanwhile, I have a dozen quants complaining at me that they are wasting time on irrelevant crap learning yet another set of pacakging tools and that the technologists need to figure out one consistent tool (or at least a stable set of tools) for managing packaging/environment concerns instead of inventing a new one each year.
But yes, let's go throwing around thinly veiled insults instead. This tells me everything I need to know about you :)
Yes you are right. I do not want to care about which management tool to use. Programming is a difficult to discipline as it is, the tools should make it easier, not more complicated. Some people might do programming purely as an exercise of self-fulfilment and they don't mind. For me it's a tool, a means to achieve some ends. If you think the python landscape and tools are in an optimal state, more power to you. Meanwhile, I have a dozen quants complaining at me that they are wasting time on irrelevant crap learning yet another set of pacakging tools and that the technologists need to figure out one consistent tool (or at least a stable set of tools) for managing packaging/environment concerns instead of inventing a new one each year.
But yes, let's go throwing around thinly veiled insults instead. This tells me everything I need to know about you :)